Albanians, record for the number of prisoners. Britain: We have criminals, no need to bring them from Albania

A judge in the United Kingdom has reproved an Albanian immigrant who turned to crime after arriving illegally in Britain with gomone. Condemning Fatmir Limani, who robbed a house in Leeds, to 18 months in prison earlier this month, Judge Simon Batiste told him that Britain had enough criminals for [...]
A judge in the United Kingdom has reproved an Albanian immigrant who turned to crime after arriving illegally in Britain with gomone. Condemning Fatmir Limani, who robbed a house in Leeds, to 18 months in prison earlier this month, Judge Simon Batiste told him that Britain had enough criminals to wait for others from Albania.
We have many criminals in the UK. We don't need to bring them from Albania”, the judge has said.
This comes as figures taken from The Mail show that 75% of Albanian citizens who have arrived illegally committed at least one criminal act in the UK. And 30% of Britain's class A drug trade is now controlled by leaders of Albanian gangs.
Albanians, many of whom arrived illegally in Britain with trucks and gomones, are now the largest contingent of foreign prisoners in U.K. prisons with 1,582 confined here.
This year so far, 93 Albanians have been imprisoned, at a cost to taxpayers of 17 million pounds, for such hard deeds as murder, rape, kidnapping and theft, including 14 in the past week.
Justice Batiste's comments to Lieman at the Leeds Crown Court, other judges across the country have also expressed concern for illegal migrants who return to crime after arriving in Britain.
Two weeks ago, Judge Joan Kidd sent cannabis grower Aurel Cajo to prison for 20 months in Durham Croa Court. Albanian Kayo had paid 4,000 pounds to smuggle into Britain.
“The message must be found that people who enter this country illegally and choose to engage in criminal activities will likely face prison and then to expel”, the judge said.
Last week, Interior Secretary Suella Braverman showed how thousands of criminals who possess values contrary to our country have sneaked into Britain with burmons.
We're seeing increased crime rates among people who came by boats, in terms of drug trading, exploitation, prostitution. There are real challenges going beyond the issue of migration of people who come here illegally. In my conversation with many police chiefs across the country, they are now reporting to me that the drug gangs they're dealing with are people who came in small boats. Many people come here illegally and soon get involved in the drug trade, in other exploitation, in criminality and prostitution”, she said.












